Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-v9fdk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-08T08:27:21.441Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliographical References

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 May 2010

Gabriela Roxana Carone
Affiliation:
University of Colorado, Boulder
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Algra, K. (1994): Concepts of Space in Greek Thought, LeidenCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allen, R. E. (ed.) (1965): Studies in Plato's Metaphysics, LondonGoogle Scholar
Annas, J. (1981): An Introduction to Plato's Republic, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Annas, J. (1982): “Plato's Myths of Judgement”, Phronesis 27, 119–43CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Annas, J. (1985): “Self-Knowledge in Early Plato”, in O'Meara (ed.), 111–38
Annas, J. (1992): Hellenistic Philosophy of Mind, BerkeleyGoogle Scholar
Annas, J. (1993): The Morality of Happiness, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Annas, J. (1994): “Plato the Skeptic”, in Waerdt, P. A. Vander (ed.), The Socratic Movement, Ithaca, 309–40Google Scholar
Annas, J. (1999): Platonic Ethics, Old and New, IthacaGoogle Scholar
Annas, J. and Rowe, C. (eds.) (2002): New Perspectives on Plato, Ancient and Modern, Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Annas, J. and Waterfield, R. (1995): Plato: Statesman, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Anton, J. P. (ed.) (1980): Science and the Sciences in Plato, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Annas, J. and Preus, A. (eds.) (1989): Essays in Ancient Greek Philosophy, vol. 3: Plato, AlbanyGoogle Scholar
Archer-Hind, R. D. (1888): The Timaeus of Plato, LondonGoogle Scholar
Armstrong, D. (1968): A Materialist Theory of the Mind, LondonGoogle Scholar
Armstrong, J. (2004): “After the Ascent: Plato on Becoming Like God”, Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 26, 171–83Google Scholar
Ashbaugh, A. F. (1988): Plato's Theory of Explanation: A Study of the Cosmological Account in the Timaeus, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Attfield, R. (1994): Environmental Philosophy: Principles and Prospects, AldershotGoogle Scholar
Balme, D. M. (1972): Aristotle's De Partibus Animalium I and De Generatione Animalium I, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Balme, D. M. (1987): “Teleology and Necessity”, in Gotthelf and Lennox (eds.), 275–85
Baltes, M. (1996): “Gegonen. Ist die Welt real entstanden oder nicht?”, in Algra, K.. (eds.), Polyhistor: Studies in the History and Historiography of Ancient Philosophy, LeidenCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benardete, S. (2000): Plato's Laws, ChicagoGoogle Scholar
Benitez, E. E. (1989): Forms in Plato's Philebus, AssenGoogle Scholar
Berti, E. (1997): “L'oggetto dell' eikos muthos nel Timeo di Platone”, in Calvo and Brisson (eds.), 119–31
Betegh, G. (2003): “Cosmological Ethics in the Timaeus and Early Stoicism”, Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 24, 273–302Google Scholar
Blank, D. L. (1993): “The Arousal of Emotion in Plato's Dialogues”, Classical Quarterly 43, 428–39CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blondell, R. (2002): The Play of Character in Plato's Dialogues, CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bluck, R. S. (1975): Plato's Sophist: A Commentary, ed. Neal, G. C., ManchesterGoogle Scholar
Bobonich, C. (1991): “Persuasion, Compulsion, and Freedom in Plato's Laws”, Classical Quarterly 41, 365–87CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bobonich, C. (1995): “The Virtues of Ordinary People in Plato's Statesman”, in Rowe (ed.), 313–29
Bobonich, C. (1996): “Reading the Laws”, in Gill and McCabe (eds.), 246–82
Bobonich, C. (2002): Plato's Utopia Recast, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bobzien, S. (1998): Determinism and Freedom in Stoic Philosophy, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Bolton, R. (1975): “Plato's Distinction between Being and Becoming”, Review of Metaphysics 29, 66–95Google Scholar
Botkin, D. (1990): Discordant Harmonies: A New Ecology for the Twenty-First Century, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Boyd, R. (1980): “Materialism Without Reductionism: What Physicalism Does Not Entail”, in Block, N. (ed.), Readings in Philosophy of Psychology, vol. 1, Cambridge, Mass., 57–106Google Scholar
Brentano, F. (1992): “Nous Poiêtikos”, in Nussbaum and Rorty (eds.), 314–42
Brisson, L. (1974): Le Même et l'Autre dans la structure ontologique du Timée de Platon, ParisGoogle Scholar
Brisson, L. (1982): Platon, les mots et les mythes, ParisGoogle Scholar
Brisson, L. (with Meyerstein, F. W.) (1991): Inventer l'univers: le problème de la connaisance et les modèles cosmologiques, ParisGoogle Scholar
Brisson, L. (1992a): Platon: Timée/Critias, ParisGoogle Scholar
Brisson, L. (1992b): “Interprétation du mythe du Politique”, paper presented at the Third Symposium Platonicum, Bristol
Brisson, L. (1995): “Interprétation du mythe du Politique”, in Rowe (ed.), 349–63
Brisson, L. (2000): Lectures de Platon, ParisGoogle Scholar
Broadie, S. (2001a): “Theodicy and Pseudo-History in the Timaeus”, Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 21, 1–28Google Scholar
Broadie, S. (2001b): “Soul and Body in Plato and Descartes”, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 101, 295–308CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brochard, V. (1926): Études de Philosophie Ancienne et de Philosophie Moderne, ParisGoogle Scholar
Brunschwig, J. (1986): “The Cradle Argument in Epicureanism and Stoicism”, in Schofield and Striker (eds.), 113–44
Burkert, W. (1972): Lore and Science in Ancient Pythagoreanism, Engl. transl., Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Burnet, J. (ed.) (1900–7): Platonis Opera, vols. 1–5, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Burnyeat, M. F. (1977): “Socratic Midwifery, Platonic Inspiration”, Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies 24, 7–16CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burnyeat, M. F. (1982): “Idealism and Greek Philosophy: What Descartes Saw and Berkeley Missed”, Philosophical Review 91, 3–40CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burnyeat, M. F. (1987): “Platonism and Mathematics: A Prelude to Discussion”, in Graeser (ed.), 213–40
Burnyeat, M. F. (1990): The Theaetetus of Plato, IndianapolisGoogle Scholar
Burnyeat, M. F. (1992): “Is an Aristotelian Philosophy of Mind Still Credible? A Draft”, in Nussbaum and Rorty (eds.), 15–26
Burnyeat, M. F. (2000): “Plato on Why Mathematics is Good for the Soul”, in Smiley, T. (ed.), Mathematics and Necessity, Proceedings of the British Academy 103, Oxford, 1–81Google Scholar
Burnyeat, M. F. (2002): “De Anima II 5”, Phronesis 47, 28–90CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bury, R. G. (1897): The Philebus of Plato, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Bury, R. G. (1929): Plato: Timaeus, LondonGoogle Scholar
Byrne, C. (1989): “Forms and Causes in Plato's Phaedo”, Dionysius 13, 3–16Google Scholar
Callicot, J. B. (1989): In Defense of the Land Ethic: Essays in Environmental Philosophy, AlbanyGoogle Scholar
Calvo, T. and Brisson, L. (eds.) (1997): Interpreting the Timaeus-Critias, Sankt AugustinGoogle Scholar
Carone, G. R. (1988): “El problema del ‘alma mala’ en la última filosofía de Platón (Leyes X, 893d ss.)”, Revista de Filosofía 3, 143–63Google Scholar
Carone, G. R. (1989): “La racionalidad humana como tarea en la filosofía de Platón”, Nova Tellus 7, 59–79Google Scholar
Carone, G. R. (1990): “Sobre el significado y el status ontológico del demiurgo del Timeo”, Méthexis 3, 33–49CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carone, G. R. (1991): La noción de dios en el Timeo de Platón, Buenos AiresGoogle Scholar
Carone, G. R. (1993): “Cosmic and Human Drama in Plato's Statesman”, Polis 12, 99–121Google Scholar
Carone, G. R. (1994): “Teleology and Evil in Laws X”, Review of Metaphysics 48, 275–98Google Scholar
Carone, G. R. (1997): “The Ethical Function of Astronomy in Plato's Timaeus”, in Calvo and Brisson (eds.), 341–9
Carone, G. R. (1998a): “Plato and the Environment”, Environmental Ethics 20, 115–33CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carone, G. R. (1998b): “Socrates' Human Wisdom and Sophrosune in Charmides 164c ff.”, Ancient Philosophy 18, 267–86CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carone, G. R. (2000): “Hedonism and the Pleasureless Life in Plato's Philebus”, Phronesis 45, 257–83CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carone, G. R. (2001a): “The Classical Greek Tradition”, in Jamieson, D. (ed.), A Companion to Environmental Philosophy, Oxford, 67–80CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carone, G. R. (2001b): “Akrasia in the Republic: Does Plato Change His Mind?”, Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 20, 107–48Google Scholar
Carone, G. R. (2002): “Pleasure, Virtue, Externals, and Happiness in Plato's Laws”, History of Philosophy Quarterly 19, 327–44Google Scholar
Carone, G. R. (2003): “The Place of Hedonism in Plato's Laws”, Ancient Philosophy 23, 283–300CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carone, G. R. (2004a): “Reversing the Myth of the Politicus”, Classical Quarterly 54, 88–108CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carone, G. R. (2004b): “Calculating Machines or Leaky Jars? The Moral Psychology of Plato's Gorgias”, Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 26, 55–96Google Scholar
Carone, G. R. (2004c): “Creation in the Timaeus: The Middle Way”, Apeiron 37, 211–26CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carone, G. R. (forthcoming): “Mind and Body in Late Plato”, Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie
Carone, G. R. (unpublished): “Luck and Human Excellence: A Platonic Perspective”
Carpenter, A. (2003): “Phileban Gods”, Ancient Philosophy 23, 93–112CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cherniss, H. (1932): “On Plato's Republic X 597b”, American Journal of Philology 53, 233–42CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cherniss, H. (1944): Aristotle's Criticism of Plato and the Academy, BaltimoreGoogle Scholar
Cherniss, H. (1945): The Riddle of the Early Academy, BerkeleyGoogle Scholar
Cherniss, H. (1947): “Some War-Time Publications concerning Plato”, American Journal of Philology 68, 225–65CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cherniss, H. (1950): review of A. J. Festugière (1949), Gnomon 22, 204–16Google Scholar
Cherniss, H. (1954): “The Sources of Evil according to Plato”, Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 98, 23–30Google Scholar
Cherniss, H. (1957): “The Relation of the Timaeus to Plato's Later Dialogues”, in Allen (ed.), 339–78
Cherniss, H. (1976): Plutarch's Moralia 13, Part I, LondonGoogle Scholar
Claghorn, G. S. (1954): Aristotle's Criticism of Plato's Timaeus, The HagueCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, S. (1995): “Herds of Free Bipeds”, in Rowe (ed.), 236–52
Cleary, J. (2001): “The Role of Theology in Plato's Laws”, in Lisi, F. (ed.), Plato's Laws and Its Historical Significance, Sankt AugustinGoogle Scholar
Code, A. (1988): “Reply to Michael Frede's ‘Being and Becoming in Plato’”, Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy suppl., 53–60Google Scholar
Cooper, J. (1977a): “Plato's Theory of the Human Good in the Philebus”, Journal of Philosophy 74, 714–30CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooper, J. (1977b): “The Psychology of Justice in Plato”, American Philosophical Quarterly 14, 131–57Google Scholar
Cooper, J. (1982): “Aristotle's Natural Teleology”, in Schofield, M. and Nussbaum, M. (eds.), Language and Logos, Cambridge, 197–222CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooper, J. (1987): “Hypothetical Necessity and Natural Teleology”, in Gotthelf and Lennox (eds.), 243–74
Cooper, J. (1996): “Eudaimonism, the Appeal to Nature, and ‘Moral Duty’ in Stoicism”, in Engstrom, S. and Whiting, J. (eds.), Aristotle, Kant, and the Stoics, Cambridge, 261–84Google Scholar
Cooper, J. (1997): “Plato's Statesman and Politics”, Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloqium in Ancient Philosophy 13, 71–104CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cornford, F. M. (1935): Plato's Theory of Knowledge, LondonGoogle Scholar
Cornford, F. M. (1937): Plato's Cosmology, LondonGoogle Scholar
Cornford, F. M. (1938): “The Polytheism of Plato: an Apology”, Mind 47, 321–30CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Craig, L. H. (1994): The War Lover: A Study of Plato's Republic, TorontoGoogle Scholar
Craig, W. C. (1980): The Cosmological Argument from Plato to Leibniz, LondonCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crombie, I. M. (1963): An Examination of Plato's Doctrines, vol. 2, LondonGoogle Scholar
Dancy, R. M. (1984): “The One, the Many, and the Forms”, Ancient Philosophy 4, 160–93CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davidson, D. (1990): Plato's Philebus, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Davidson, D. (1993): “Plato's Philosopher”, in Irwin, T. and Nussbaum, M. (eds.), Virtue, Love, and Form, Apeiron 26, Edmonton, 179–94Google Scholar
Davis, P. J. (1979): “The Fourfold Classification in Plato's Philebus”, Apeiron 13, 124–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chiara-Quenzer, D. (1993): “A Method for Pleasure and Reason: Plato's Philebus”, Apeiron 26, 37–55Google Scholar
Lacy, P. (1939): “The Problem of Causation in Plato's Philosophy”, Classical Philology 24, 97–115Google Scholar
Delcomminette, S. (2003): “False Pleasures, Appearance and Imagination in the Philebus”, Phronesis 48, 215–37CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Demos, R. (1968): “Plato's Doctrine of the Psyche as a Self-Moving Motion”, Journal of the History of Philosophy 6, 133–45Google Scholar
Rijk, L. M. (1986): Plato's Sophist: A Philosophical Commentary, AmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Descartes, R. (1984–5): Discourse on Method (1637) and Meditations (1641), in The Philosophical Writings of Descartes, vols. 1–2, ed. and transl. by Cottingham, J.., CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Des Places, E. (1964): Sungeneia: La parenté de l'homme avec Dieu d'Homère à la patristique, ParisGoogle Scholar
Devall, B. (1988): Simple in Means, Rich in Ends, Salt Lake CityGoogle Scholar
Balme, D. M. and Sessions, G. (1985): Deep Ecology, Salt Lake CityGoogle Scholar
Devereux, D. (2000): “Separation and Immanence in Plato's Theory of Forms”, in Fine (ed.), 194–216
Vogel, C. (1970): Philosophia I: Studies in Greek Philosophy, AssenGoogle Scholar
Dicks, D. R. (1970): Early Greek Astronomy to Aristotle, BristolGoogle Scholar
Diehl, E. (ed.) (1903–6): Procli Diadochi In Platonis Timaeum Commentaria, vols. 1–3, LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Diels, H. and Kranz, W. (eds.) (1951): Die Fragmente der Vorsokratiker, vol. 1, Berlin, 6th ed. (=DK)Google Scholar
Diès, A. (1927): Autour de Platon, vol. 2, ParisGoogle Scholar
Diès, A. (1935): Platon: Le Politique, ParisGoogle Scholar
Diès, A. (1941): Platon: Philèbe, ParisGoogle Scholar
Diès, A. (1956): Platon: Les Lois (VII–X), ParisGoogle Scholar
Dillon, J. (1989): “Tampering with the Timaeus: Ideological Emendations in Plato, with special reference to the Timaeus”, American Journal of Philology 110, 50–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dillon, J. (1992): “Plato and the Golden Age”, Hermathena 153, 21–36Google Scholar
Dillon, J. (1995): “The Neoplatonic Exegesis of the Statesman Myth”, in Rowe (ed.), 364–74
Dixsaut, M. (ed.) (1999): La fêlure du plaisir: Études sur le Philèbe de Platon, ParisGoogle Scholar
Dodds, E. R. (1951): The Greeks and the Irrational, BerkeleyGoogle Scholar
Dodds, E. R. (1965): “Plato and the Irrational”, Journal of Hellenic Studies 45, 16–25Google Scholar
Donini, P. L. (1988): “Il Timeo: unità del dialogo, verisimiglianza del discorso”, Elenchos 9, 5–52Google Scholar
Dorter, K. (1994): Form and Good in Plato's Eleatic Dialogues, BerkeleyGoogle Scholar
Dybikowski, J. (1970): “False Pleasures in the Philebus”, Phronesis 15, 147–65CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dye, J. W. (1978): “Plato's Concept of Causal Explanation”, Tulane Studies in Philosophy 27, 37–56CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Easterling, H. J. (1967): “Causation in Timaeus and Laws X”, Eranos 65, 25–38Google Scholar
Edelstein, L. and Kidd, I. (eds.) (1988): Posidonius: The Fragments, vol. 1, Cambridge, 2nd ed.Google Scholar
Eggers Lan, C. (1984): Las nociones de tiempo y eternidad de Homero a Platón, Mexico CityGoogle Scholar
Eggers Lan, C. (1987): “Dios en la ontología del Parménides”, in Lan, C. Eggers (ed.), Platón: Los diálogos tardíos, Mexico City, 49–56Google Scholar
Eggers Lan, C. (1992): “Zeus e anima del mondo nel Fedro (246e–253c)”, in Rossetti (ed.), 40–6
England, E. B. (1921): The Laws of Plato, vol. 2 (VII–Ⅻ), ManchesterGoogle Scholar
Erler, M. (1995): “Kommentar zu Brisson und Dillon”, in Rowe (ed.), 375–80
Fahrnkopf, R. (1977): “Forms in the Philebus”, Journal of the History of Philosophy 15, 202–7CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferrari, G. R. F. (1987): Listening to the Cicadas: A Study of Plato's Phaedrus, CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferrari, G. R. F. (1995): “Myth and Conservatism in Plato's Statesman”, in Rowe (ed.), 389–97
Festugière, A. J. (1947): “Platon et l'Orient”, Revue de Philologie 21, 5–45Google Scholar
Festugière, A. J. (1949): La révélation d'Hermès Trismégiste, vol. 2: Le dieu cosmique, ParisGoogle Scholar
Fine, G. (1987): “Forms as Causes: Plato and Aristotle”, in Graeser (ed.), 69–112
Fine, G. (1988a): “Owen's Progress”, Philosophical Review 97, 373–99Google Scholar
Fine, G. (1988b): “Plato on Perception: A Reply to Professor Turnbull, ‘Becoming and Intelligibility’”, Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy suppl., 15–28Google Scholar
Fine, G. (ed.) (2000): Plato, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Finnis, J. (1980): Natural Law and Natural Rights, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Foot, P. (1978): Virtues and Vices, BerkeleyGoogle Scholar
Fowler, H. (1925): Plato: Philebus, LondonGoogle Scholar
Fox, W. (1984): “Deep Ecology: A New Philosophy of Our Time?”, The Ecologist 14, 194–200Google Scholar
Frede, D. (1985): “Rumpelstiltskin's Pleasures: True and False Pleasures in Plato's Philebus”, Phronesis 30, 151–80CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frede, D. (1992): “Disintegration and Restoration: Pleasure and Pain in Plato's Philebus”, in Kraut (ed.), 425–63
Frede, D. (1993): Plato: Philebus, IndianapolisGoogle Scholar
Frede, D. (1996a): “The Hedonist's Conversion: The Role of Socrates in the Philebus”, in Gill and McCabe (eds.), 213–48
Frede, D. (1996b): “The Philosophical Economy of Plato's Psychology: Rationality and Common Concepts in the Timaeus”, in Frede, M. and Striker, G. (eds.), Rationality in Greek Thought, Oxford, 29–58Google Scholar
Frede, D. (1997): Platon: Philebos, GöttingenGoogle Scholar
Frede, M. (1980): “The Original Notion of Cause”, in Schofield, M.. (eds.), Doubt and Dogmatism. Studies in Hellenistic Epistemology, Oxford, 217–49Google Scholar
Frede, M. (1988): “Being and Becoming in Plato”, Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy suppl., 37–52Google Scholar
Frede, M. (1992): “Plato's Arguments and the Dialogue Form”, in Klagge and Smith (eds.), 201–19
Friedlaender, P. (1969): Plato, vol. 3, English transl., LondonGoogle Scholar
Frutiger, P. (1930): Les Mythes de Platon, ParisGoogle Scholar
Furley, D. (1985): “The Rainfall Example in Physics ⅱ.8”, in Gotthelf (ed.), 177–82
Gadamer, H. G. (1975): Truth and Method, English transl., New YorkGoogle Scholar
Gadamer, H. G. (1980): Dialogue and Dialectic: Eight Hermeneutical Studies on Plato, English transl., New HavenGoogle Scholar
Gadamer, H. G. (1991): Plato's Dialectical Ethics: Phenomenological Interpretations relating to the Philebus, English transl., New HavenGoogle Scholar
Gaiser, K. (1963): Platons Ungeschriebene Lehre, StuttgartGoogle Scholar
Gaiser, K. (1984): Platone come scrittore filosofico, Italian transl., NaplesGoogle Scholar
Gallop, D. (1975): Plato's Phaedo, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Gaudin, C. (1990): “Automotricité et auto affection: un commentaire de Platon Lois, X 894d–895c”, Elenchos 11, 169–85Google Scholar
Gerson, L. (1990): God and Greek Philosophy, LondonGoogle Scholar
Gill, C. (1979): “Plato and Politics: The Critias and the Politicus”, Phronesis 24, 148–67CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, C. (1996): Personality in Greek Epic, Tragedy, and Philosophy, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Gill, C. (2000): “The Body's Fault? Plato's Timaeus on Psychic Illness”, in Wright (ed.), 59–84
Gill, C. (2002): “Dialectic and the Dialogue Form”, in Annas and Rowe (eds.), 145–71
Gill, C. and McCabe, M. M. (eds.) (1996): Form and Argument in Late Plato, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Gill, M. L. (1987): “Matter and Flux in Plato's Timaeus”, Phronesis 32, 34–53CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goodpaster, K. E. (1982): “From Egoism to Environmentalism”, in Goodpaster, K. E. and Sayre, K. M. (eds.), Ethics and Problems of the 21st Century, Notre Dame, 21–35Google Scholar
Gosling, J. (1975): Plato: Philebus, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Balme, D. M. and Taylor, C. (1982): The Greeks on Pleasure, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Gotthelf, A. (ed.) (1985): Aristotle on Nature and Living Things, PittsburghGoogle Scholar
Balme, D. M. and Lennox, J. G. (eds.) (1987): Philosophical Issues in Aristotle's Biology, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Graeser, A. (ed.) (1987): Mathematics and Metaphysics in Aristotle, BerneGoogle Scholar
Gregory, A. (2000): Plato's Philosophy of Science, LondonGoogle Scholar
Griswold, C. L. Jr. (ed.) (1988): Platonic Writings. Platonic Readings, LondonGoogle Scholar
Grube, G. (1932): “The Composition of the World-Soul in Tim. 35a–b”, Classical Philology 27, 80–2CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grube, G. (1980): Plato's Thought, with new introduction and bibliography by D. Zeyl, IndianapolisGoogle Scholar
Guthrie, W. K. C. (1978): A History of Greek Philosophy, vol. 5, CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guthrie, W. K. C. (1981): A History of Greek Philosophy, vol. 6, CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hackforth, R. (1936): “Plato's Theism”, in Allen (ed.), 439–47
Hackforth, R. (1945): Plato's Examination of Pleasure, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Hackforth, R. (1952): Plato's Phaedrus, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Hackforth, R. (1959): “Plato's Cosmogony (Tim. 27d ff.)”, Classical Quarterly 9, 17–22Google Scholar
Hahn, R. (1978): “On Plato's Philebus 15b1–8”, Phronesis 23, 158–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hampton, C. (1987): “Pleasure, Truth and Being in Plato's Philebus: A Reply to Professor Frede”, Phronesis 32, 253–62CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hampton, C. (1990): Pleasure, Knowledge and Being. An Analysis of Plato's Philebus, AlbanyGoogle Scholar
Hankinson, R. J. (1998): Cause and Explanation in Ancient Greek Thought, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Harris, J. W. (1980): Legal Philosophies, LondonGoogle Scholar
Harte, V. (2002): Plato on Parts and Wholes, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heath, T. (1913): Aristarchus of Samos, the Ancient Copernicus: A History of Greek Astronomy to Aristarchus, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Heinaman, R. (1990): “Aristotle and the Mind-Body Problem”, Phronesis 35, 83–102CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heinze, R. (ed.) (1965): Xenokrates: Fragmente, HildesheimGoogle Scholar
Herter, H. (1957): “Bewegung der Materie bei Platon”, Rheinisches Museum für Philologie N. F. 100, 327–47Google Scholar
Hirsch, U. (1995): “Mimeisthai und verwandte Ausdrücke in Platons Politikos”, in Rowe (ed.), 184–9
Hitchcock, D. (1985): “The Good in Plato's Republic”, Apeiron 19, 65–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hobbs, A. (2000): Plato and the Hero, CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Howland, J. (1993): “The Eleatic Stranger's Condemnation of Socrates”, Polis 12, 15–36Google Scholar
Hudson, S. (1986): Human Character and Morality, BostonGoogle Scholar
Huffman, C. A. (1993): Philolaus of Croton: Pythagorean and Presocratic, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Hughes, J. D. (1982): “Gaia: Environmental Problems in Chthonic Perspective”, Environmental Review 6, 92–104CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hume, D. (1739): A Treatise of Human Nature, ed. Selby-Bigge, L. A., Oxford, 1888Google Scholar
Hursthouse, R. (1997): “Virtue Ethics and the Emotions”, in Statman, D. (ed.), Virtue Ethics, Washington, D.C., 99–117Google Scholar
Hursthouse, R. (1999): On Virtue Ethics, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Irwin, T. H. (1977): “Plato's Heracliteanism”, Philosophical Quarterly 27, 1–13CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Irwin, T. H. (1988): “Reply to David L. Roochnik”, in Griswold (ed.), 194–9
Irwin, T. H. (1995): Plato's Ethics, New YorkCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, H. (1882): “Plato's Later Theory of Ideas”, Journal of Philology 10, 253–98Google Scholar
Jaeger, W. (1948): Aristotle: Fundamentals of the History of His Development, English transl. 2nd ed., OxfordGoogle Scholar
Johansen, T. (2000): “Body, Soul, and Tripartition in Plato's Timaeus”, Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 19, 87–111Google Scholar
Johansen, T. (2004): Plato's Natural Philosophy, CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jordan, R. W. (1983): Plato's Arguments for Forms, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Kahn, C. (1960): Anaximander and the Origins of Greek Cosmology, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Kahn, C. (1979): The Art and Thought of Heraclitus, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Kahn, C. (1981): “Some Philosophical Uses of ‘To Be’ in Plato”, Phronesis 26, 105–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kahn, C. (1985): “The Place of the Prime Mover in Aristotle's Teleology”, in Gotthelf (ed.), 183–205
Kahn, C. (1992): “Did Plato Write Socratic Dialogues?”, in Benson, H. (ed.), Essays on the Philosophy of Socrates, Oxford, 35–52Google Scholar
Kahn, C. (1996): Plato and the Socratic Dialogue, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Kahn, C. (2004): “From Republic to Laws”, Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 26, 337–62Google Scholar
Katz, E. (2000): “Against the Inevitability of Anthropocentrism”, in Katz, E.. (eds.), Beneath the Surface: Critical Essays in the Philosophy of Deep Ecology, Cambridge, Mass., 17–42Google Scholar
Keyt, D. (1961): “Aristotle on Plato's Receptacle”, American Journal of Philology 82, 291–300CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirk, G. S., Raven, J. E., and Schofield, M. (1983): The Presocratic Philosophers, 2nd ed., CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Klagge, J. C. and Smith, D. (eds.) (1992): Methods for Interpreting Plato and His Dialogues, Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy suppl., OxfordGoogle Scholar
Knorr, W. R. (1990): “Plato and Eudoxus on the Planetary Motions”, Journal for the History of Astronomy 21, 313–29CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kolb, D. A. (1983): “Pythagoras Bound: Limit and Unlimited in Plato's Philebus”, Journal of the History of Philosophy 21, 497–511CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kraemer, H. (1982): Platone e i fondamenti della metafisica, Italian transl., MilanGoogle Scholar
Kraut, R. (1979): “Two Conceptions of Happiness”, Philosophical Review 88, 167–97CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kraut, R. (1984): Socrates and the State, PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Kraut, R. (1988): “Reply to Clifford Orwin”, in Griswold (ed.), 177–82
Kraut, R. (ed.) (1992): The Cambridge Companion to Plato, CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kucharski, P. (1966): “Eschatologie et connaissance dans le Timée”, in La spéculation platonicienne, Paris, 1971, 307–37
Kung, J. (1985): “Tetrahedra, Motion and Virtue”, Nous 19, 17–27CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kung, J. (1989): “Mathematics and Virtue in Plato's Timaeus”, in Anton and Preus (eds.), 309–39
Laks, A. (1990a): “Raison et plaisir: pour une caractérisation des Lois de Platon”, in Mattéi, J. (ed.), Actes du Congrès de Nice, Paris, 291–303Google Scholar
Laks, A. (1990b): “Legislation and Demiurgy: On the Relationship between Plato's Republic and Laws”, Classical Antiquity 9, 209–29CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Laks, A. (2000): “The Laws”, in Rowe and Schofield (eds.), 258–92
Lane, M. (1995): “A New Angle on Utopia: The Political Theory of the Statesman”, in Rowe (ed.), 276–91
Lane, M. (1998): Method and Politics in Plato's Statesman, CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, E. N. (1976): “Reason and Rotation: Circular Movement as the Model of Mind (Nous) in Later Plato”, in Werkmeister, W. H. (ed.), Facets of Plato's Philosophy, Phronesis suppl. vol. 2, Assen, 70–102Google Scholar
Lennox, J. G. (1985): “Plato's Unnatural Teleology”, in O'Meara (ed.), 195–218
Lennox, J. G. (1997): “Material and Formal Natures in Aristotle's De partibus animalium”, in Kullmann, W. and Follinger, S. (eds.), Aristotelische Biologie, Intention, Methoden, Ergebnisse, Stuttgart, 162–81Google Scholar
Leopold, A. (1949): “The Land Ethic”, in A Sand County Almanac, New York, 201–26
Lewis, D. (1983): “New Work for a Theory of Universals”, Australasian Journal of Philosophy 61, 343–77CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liddell, H., Scott, R. and Jones, H. (1968): A Greek-English Lexicon, repr. with suppl., Oxford (=LSJ)Google Scholar
Lloyd, G. E. R. (1968): “Plato as a Natural Scientist”, Journal of Hellenic Studies 88, 78–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lloyd, G. E. R. (1991): “Plato on Mathematics and Nature, Myth and Science”, in Methods and Problems in Greek Science, Cambridge, 333–51
Long, A. (1996): Stoic Studies, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Long, A. and Sedley, D. (1987): The Hellenistic Philosophers, vols. 1–2, Cambridge (=LS)Google Scholar
López, M. L. (1963): El problema de Dios en Platón. La teología del Demiurgo, SalamancaGoogle Scholar
Louden, R. (1992): Morality and Moral Theory, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lovejoy, A. (1936): The Great Chain of Being, Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Lovibond, S. (1991): “Plato's Theory of Mind”, in Everson, S. (ed.), Companions to Ancient Thought 2: Psychology, Cambridge, 35–55Google Scholar
MacClintock, S. (1961): “More on the Structure of the Philebus”, Phronesis 6, 46–52CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacIntyre, A. (1981): After Virtue, Notre DameGoogle Scholar
Mackenzie, M. M. (1981): Plato on Punishment, BerkeleyGoogle Scholar
Malcolm, J. (1983): “Does Plato Revise his Ontology in Sophist 246c–249d?”, Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 65, 115–27CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mansion, A. (1946): Introduction a la Physique Aristotelicienne, LouvainGoogle Scholar
Masi, G. (2001): Platone: Il Timeo, BolognaGoogle Scholar
Mattéi, J. F. (1988): “The Theater of Myth in Plato”, in Griswold (ed.), 66–83
Matthews, F. (1991): The Ecological Self, LondonGoogle Scholar
Mayo, B. (1958): Ethics and the Moral Life, LondonGoogle Scholar
McCabe, M. M. (1992): “Myth, Allegory and Argument in Plato”, in Barker, A. and Warner, M. (eds.), The Language of the Cave, Apeiron 25, Edmonton, 47–67Google Scholar
McCabe, M. M. (1994): Plato's Individuals, PrincetonGoogle Scholar
McCabe, M. M. (2000): Plato and His Predecessors, CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
McPherran, M. (1996): The Religion of Socrates, University ParkGoogle Scholar
Meinwald, C. (1998): “Prometheus's Bounds: Peras and Apeiron in Plato's Philebus”, in Gentzler, J. (ed.), Method in Ancient Philosophy, Oxford, 164–80Google Scholar
Menn, S. (1992): “Aristotle and Plato on God as Nous and as the Good”, Review of Metaphysics 45, 543–73Google Scholar
Migliori, M. (1993): L'uomo fra piacere, intelligenza e Bene: Commentario storico-filosofico al “Filebo” di Platone, MilanGoogle Scholar
Miller, M. H. Jr. (1980): The Philosopher in Plato's Statesman, The HagueCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mohr, R. (1977): “Plato, Statesman 284c-d: An ‘Argument from the Sciences’”, Phronesis 22, 232–4CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mohr, R. (1978): “The Formation of the Cosmos in the Statesman Myth”, Phoenix 32, 250–2CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mohr, R. (1983): “Philebus 55c–62a and Revisionism”, in Pelletier and King-Farlow (eds.), 165–70
Mohr, R. (1985): The Platonic Cosmology, LeidenCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mohr, R. (1989): “Plato's Theology Reconsidered: What the Demiurge Does”, in Anton and Preus (eds.), 293–307
Mondolfo, R. (1934): L'infinito nel pensiero dei Greci, FlorenceGoogle Scholar
Montoneri, L. (1968): Il problema del male nella filosofia di Platone, PadovaGoogle Scholar
Moore, G. E. (1903): Principia Ethica, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Moravcsik, J. M. (1979): “Forms, Nature, and the Good in the Philebus”, Phronesis 24, 81–104CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moreau, J. (1939): L'Âme du Monde de Platon aux Stoïciens, HildesheimGoogle Scholar
Morgan, K. (2000): Myth and Philosophy from the Presocratics to Plato, CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morrow, G. (1950): “Necessity and Persuasion in Plato's Timaeus”, in Allen (ed.), 421–37
Morrow, G. (1954): “The Demiurge in Politics: The Timaeus and the Laws”, Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 27, 5–23CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morrow, G. (1960): Plato's Cretan City, PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Mourelatos, A. (1980): “Plato's ‘Real Astronomy’: Republic 527d–531d”, in Anton (ed.), 33–73
Mourelatos, A. (1981): “Astronomy and Kinematics in Plato's Project of Rationalistic Explanation”, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science 12, 1–32CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mugnier, R. (1930): Le sense du mot THEIOS chez Platon, ParisGoogle Scholar
Naddaf, G. (1993): L'origine et l'evolution du concept grec du phusis, LewistonGoogle Scholar
Naddaf, G. (1994): “Mind and Progress in Plato”, Polis 12, 122–33Google Scholar
Naddaf, G. (1997): “Plato and the Peri Phuseôs Tradition”, in Calvo and Brisson (eds.), 27–36
Naess, A. (1973): “The Shallow and the Deep, Long-Range Ecology Movement: A Summary”, Inquiry 16, 95–100CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nagel, T. (1979): “Panpsychism”, in Mortal Questions, New York, 181–95
Nehamas, A. (1975): “Plato on the Imperfection of the Sensible World”, American Philosophical Quarterly 12, 105–17Google Scholar
Nehamas, A. and Woodruff, P. (1995): Plato: Phaedrus, IndianapolisGoogle Scholar
Nicholson, G. (1999): Plato's Phaedrus, IndianaGoogle Scholar
Nightingale, A. (1996): “Plato on the Origins of Evil: The Statesman Myth Reconsidered”, Ancient Philosophy 16, 65–91CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Notomi, N. (1999): The Unity of Plato's Sophist, CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nussbaum, M. (1986): The Fragility of Goodness. Luck and Ethics in Greek Tragedy and Philosophy, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Nussbaum, M. and Rorty, A. (eds.) (1992): Essays on Aristotle's De Anima, OxfordGoogle Scholar
O'Meara, D. J. (ed.) (1985): Platonic Investigations, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
Osborne, C. (1988): “Topography in the Timaeus: Plato and Augustine on Mankind's Place in the Natural World”, Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society 214 (N.S. 34), 104–13CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Osborne, C. (1996): “Space, Time, Shape, and Direction: Creative Discourse in the Timaeus”, in Gill and McCabe (eds.), 179–211
Ostenfeld, E. (1982): Forms, Matter and Mind: Three Strands in Plato's Metaphysics, The HagueCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ostenfeld, E. (1987): Ancient Greek Psychology, AarhusGoogle Scholar
Ostenfeld, E. (1990): “Self Motion, Tripartition and Embodiment”, Classica et Mediaevalia 41, 43–9Google Scholar
Owen, G. E. L. (1953): “The Place of the Timaeus in Plato's Dialogues”, in Allen (ed.), 313–38
Owen, G. E. L. (1973): “Plato on the Undepictable”, in Lee, E.. (eds.), Exegesis and Argument, Assen, 349–61Google Scholar
Parry, R. (2002): “The Soul in Laws X and Disorderly Motion in Timaeus”, Ancient Philosophy 22, 289–301CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Patterson, R. (1981): “The Unique Worlds of the Timaeus”, Phoenix 35, 105–19CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Patterson, R. (1985): Image and Reality in Plato's Metaphysics, IndianapolisGoogle Scholar
Pelletier, F. and King-Farlow, J. (eds.), New Essays on Plato, Canadian Journal of Philosophy suppl. vol. 9, Guelph
Penner, T. (1970): “False Anticipatory Pleasures”, Phronesis 15, 166–78CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perl, E. (1998): “The Demiurge and the Forms: A Return to the Ancient Interpretation of Plato's Timaeus”, Ancient Philosophy 18, 81–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Post, J. (1987): The Faces of Existence, IthacaGoogle Scholar
Preus, A. (1975): Science and Philosophy in Aristotle's Biological Works, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Priest, S. (1991): Theories of the Mind, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Prior, A. N. (1960): “The Autonomy of Ethics”, Australasian Journal of Philosophy 38, 199–206CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prior, W. J. (1985): Unity and Development in Plato's Metaphysics, LondonGoogle Scholar
Putnam, H. (1999): The Threefold Cord. Mind, Body, and World, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Reale, G. (1997): “Plato's Doctrine of the Origin of the World, with special reference to the Timaeus”, in Calvo and Brisson (eds.), 149–64
Reeve, C. D. C. (1988): Philosopher-Kings, PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Reverdin, O. (1945): La religion de la cité platonicienne, ParisGoogle Scholar
Reydams-Schils, G. (1999): Demiurge and Providence, TurnhoutGoogle Scholar
Rist, J. M. (1964): Eros and Psyche, TorontoGoogle Scholar
Ritter, C. (1933): The Essence of Plato's Philosophy, English transl., New YorkGoogle Scholar
Roberts, J. (1987): “Plato on the Causes of Wrongdoing in the Laws”, Ancient Philosophy 7, 23–37CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robin, L. (1908): La théorie platonicienne de l'amour, ParisGoogle Scholar
Robin, L. (1935): Platon, ParisGoogle Scholar
Robinson, R. (1953): Plato's Earlier Dialectic, 2nd ed., OxfordGoogle Scholar
Robinson, T. M. (1967): “Demiurge and World-Soul in Plato's Politicus”, American Journal of Philology 88, 57–66CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robinson, T. M. (1969): “Deux problèmes de la psychologie cosmique platonicienne”, Revue Philosophique 159, 247–53Google Scholar
Robinson, T. M. (1970): Plato's Psychology, TorontoGoogle Scholar
Robinson, T. M. (1979): “The Argument of Timaeus 27d ff.”, Phronesis 24, 105–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robinson, T. M. (1986): “The Timaeus on Types of Duration”, Illinois Classical Studies 11, 143–51Google Scholar
Robinson, T. M. (1993): “The World as Art-Object: Science and the Real in Plato's Timaeus”, Illinois Classical Studies 18, 99–111Google Scholar
Robinson, T. M. (1995): Plato's Psychology, 2nd ed., TorontoGoogle Scholar
Robinson, T. M. (2000): “Mind-Body Dualism in Plato”, in Wright, J. P. and Potter, P. (eds.), Psyche and Soma, Oxford, 37–55Google Scholar
Rodier, G. (1926): études de Philosophie Grecque, ParisGoogle Scholar
Rosen, S. (1979): “Plato's Myth of the Reversed Cosmos”, Review of Metaphysics 33, 59–85Google Scholar
Ross, W. D. (1951): Plato's Theory of Ideas, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Rossetti, L. (ed.) (1992): Understanding the Phaedrus, Sankt AugustinGoogle Scholar
Rowe, C. (1992a): “La data relativa del Fedro”, in Rossetti (ed.), 31–9
Rowe, C. (1992b): “On Reading Plato”, Méthexis 5, 53–68CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rowe, C. (1995): Plato: Statesman, WarminsterGoogle Scholar
Rowe, C. (ed.) (1995): Reading the Statesman, Sankt AugustinGoogle Scholar
Rowe, C. (1996): “The Politicus: Structure and Form”, in Gill and McCabe (eds.), 153–78
Rowe, C. (1999a): Plato: Statesman, IndianapolisGoogle Scholar
Rowe, C. (1999b): “La forme dramatique et la structure du Philèbe”, in Dixsaut (ed.), 9–25
Rowe, C. (2000): “The Politicus and Other Dialogues”, in Rowe and Schofield (eds.), 233–57
Rowe, C. and Schofield, M. (eds.) (2000): The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Political Thought, CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Runciman, W. G. (1962): Plato's Later Epistemology, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Runia, D. (1997): “The Literary and Philosophical Status of Timaeus' Proemium”, in Calvo and Brisson (eds.), 101–18
Russell, D. C. (2004): “Virtue as “Likeness to God” in Plato and Seneca”, Journal of the History of Philosophy 42, 241–60CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saunders, T. J. (1973): “Penology and Eschatology in Plato's Timaeus and Laws”, Classical Quarterly 23, 232–44CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saunders, T. J. (1991): Plato's Penal Code, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Saunders, T. J. (1992): “Plato's Later Political Thought”, in Kraut (ed.), 464–92
Sayre, K. (1983): Plato's Late Ontology, PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Sayre, K. (1992): “A Maieutic View of Five Late Dialogues”, in Klagge and Smith (eds.), 221–43
Schofield, M. (1991): The Stoic Idea of the City, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Schofield, M. (1997): “The Disappearance of the Philosopher-King”, Proceedings of the Boston Area Collogium in Ancient Philosophy 13, 213–41CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schofield, M. and Striker, G. (eds.) (1986): The Norms of Nature, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Scodel, H. R. (1987): Diairesis and Myth in Plato's Statesman, GöttingenCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sedley, D. (1989): “Teleology and Myth in the Phaedo”, Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy 5, 359–83CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sedley, D. (1991): “Is Aristotle's Teleology Anthropocentric?”, Phronesis 36, 179–96CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sedley, D. (1996): “Three Platonist Interpretations of the Theaetetus”, in Gill and McCabe (eds.), 79–103
Sedley, D. (1997): “Becoming Like God in the Timaeus and Aristotle”, in Calvo and Brisson (eds.), 327–39
Sedley, D. (1998): “Platonic Causes”, Phronesis 43, 114–32CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sedley, D. (2000): “The Ideal of Godlikeness”, in Fine (ed.), 791–810
Sedley, D. (2002): “The Origins of the Stoic God”, in Frede, D. and Laks, A. (eds.), Traditions of Theology, LeidenGoogle Scholar
Sedley, D. (2004): The Midwife of Platonism, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seligman, P. (1974): Being and Not-Being: An Introduction to Plato's Sophist, The HagueCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sherman, N. (1999): “Character Development and Aristotelian Virtue”, in Carr, D. and Steutel, J. (eds.), Virtue Ethics and Moral Education, London, 35–48Google Scholar
Shields, C. (1993): “Some Recent Approaches to Aristotle's De Anima”, in Aristotle: De Anima Books II and III (with passages from book I), transl. by D. W. Hamlyn and with a report by C. Shields, Oxford, 157–87
Shiner, R. (1974): Knowledge and Reality in Plato's Philebus, AssenGoogle Scholar
Shiner, R. (1983): “Knowledge in Philebus 55c–62a: A Response”, in Pelletier and King-Farlow (eds.), 171–83
Shoemaker, S. (1984): Identity, Cause, and Mind, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Shorey, P. (1935): Plato: The Republic, vol. 2, LondonGoogle Scholar
Silverman, A. (2002): The Dialectic of Essence: A Study of Plato's Metaphysics, PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Simpson, P. (1987): Goodness and Nature: A Defence of Ethical Naturalism, DordrechtGoogle Scholar
Simpson, P. (1997): “Contemporary Virtue Ethics and Aristotle”, in Statman (ed.), 260–85
Skemp, J. B. (1942): The Theory of Motion in Plato's Later Dialogues, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Skemp, J. B. (1952): Plato's Statesman, LondonGoogle Scholar
Solmsen, F. (1942): Plato's Theology, IthacaGoogle Scholar
Solmsen, F. (1962): “Hesiodic Motifs in Plato”, Entretiens VII, Vandoeuvres-Genève, 173–211
Solmsen, F. (1983): “Plato and the Concept of the Soul (Psuchê): Some Historical Perspectives”, Journal of the History of Ideas 44, 355–67CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sorabji, R. (1983): Time, Creation and the Continuum, LondonGoogle Scholar
Sorabji, R. (1993): Animal Minds and Human Morals, LondonGoogle Scholar
Sorabji, R. (2000): Emotion and Peace of Mind, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Sorabji, R. (2003): “The Mind-Body Relation in the Wake of Plato's Timaeus”, in Reydams-Schils, G. (ed.), Plato's Timaeus as Cultural Icon, Notre DameGoogle Scholar
Sosa, E. (1980): “The Varieties of Causation”, in Sosa and Tooley (eds.), 234–42
Sosa, E. and Tooley, M. (eds.) (1993): Causation, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Stalley, R. F. (1983): An Introduction to Plato's Laws, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Statman, D. (ed.) (1997): Virtue Ethics, EdinburghGoogle Scholar
Steel, C. (2001): “The Moral Purpose of the Human Body: A Reading of Timaeus 69–72”, Phronesis 46, 105–28CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stewart, J. A. (1960): The Myths of Plato, 2nd ed., LondonGoogle Scholar
Strange, S. (2000): “The Double Explanation in the Timaeus”, in Fine (ed.), 399–417
Striker, G. (1970): Peras und Apeiron, Hypomnemata 30, GöttingenGoogle Scholar
Striker, G. (1991): “Following Nature: A Study in Stoic Ethics”, Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 9, 1–73Google Scholar
Striker, G. (1996): “Origins of the Concept of Natural Law”, in Essays in Hellenistic Epistemology and Ethics, Cambridge, 209–20
Tarán, L. (1971): “The Creation Myth in Plato's Timaeus”, in Anton, J. P. and Kustas, G. (eds.), Essays in Greek Philosophy, New York, 372–407Google Scholar
Tarán, L. (1979): “Perpetual Duration and Atemporal Eternity in Parmenides and Plato”, The Monist 62, 43–53CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, A. E. (1926): Plato. The Man and His Work, LondonGoogle Scholar
Taylor, A. E. (1928): A Commentary on Plato's Timaeus, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Taylor, A. E. (1938): “The Polytheism of Plato: An Apologia”, Mind 47, 180–99CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, P. (1986): Respect for Nature, PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Teloh, H. (1981): The Development of Plato's Metaphysics, University ParkGoogle Scholar
Theiler, W. (1925): Zur Geschichte der teleologischen Naturbetrachtung bis auf Aristoteles, ZurichGoogle Scholar
Tigerstedt, E. N. (1977): Interpreting Plato, UppsalaGoogle Scholar
Trevaskis, J. R. (1967): “Division and its Relation to Dialectic and Ontology”, Phronesis 12, 118–29CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turnbull, R. (1988): “Becoming and Intelligibility”, Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy suppl., 1–14Google Scholar
Vallejo, A. (1997): “No, It's Not a Fiction”, in Calvo and Brisson (eds.), 141–8
Van Riel, G. (1999): “Le plaisir est-il la réplétion d'un manque? La définition du plaisir (32a–36c) et la physiologie des plaisirs faux (42c–44a)”, in Dixsaut (ed.), 299–314
Verdenius, W. J. (1954): “Platons Gottesbegriff”, Entretiens I, Vandoeuvres-Genève, 241–93
Vernant, J. P. (1985): Mythe et pensée chez les Grecs, nouvelle ed., ParisGoogle Scholar
Vidal-Naquet, P. (1978): “Plato's Myth of the Statesman: The Ambiguities of The Golden Age and of History”, Journal of Hellenic Studies 98, 132–41CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vlastos, G. (1939): “The Disorderly Motion in the Timaeus”, in Allen (ed.), 379–99
Vlastos, G. (1957): “Socratic Knowledge and Platonic “Pessimism””, Philosophical Review 66, 226–38CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vlastos, G. (1964): “Creation in the Timaeus: Is it a Fiction?”, in Allen (ed.), 401–19
Vlastos, G. (1965): “Degrees of Reality in Plato”, in Bambrough, R. (ed.), New Essays on Plato and Aristotle, London, 1–19Google Scholar
Vlastos, G. (1975): Plato's Universe, SeattleGoogle Scholar
Vlastos, G. (1980): “The Role of Observation in Plato's Conception of Astronomy”, in Anton (ed.), 1–31
Vlastos, G. (1981a): Platonic Studies, 2nd ed., PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Vlastos, G. (1981b): “Reasons and Causes in the Phaedo”, in Vlastos (1981a), 76–110
Vlastos, G. (1981c): “Justice and Happiness in the Republic”, in Vlastos (1981a), 111–39
Vlastos, G. (1988): “Socrates”, Proceedings of the British Academy 74, 89–111Google Scholar
Waterfield, R. A. H. (1980): “The Place of the Philebus in Plato's Dialogues”, Phronesis 25, 270–305CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Waterfield, R. A. H. (1982): Plato: Philebus, HarmondsworthGoogle Scholar
Westerink, L. G. (ed.) (1962): Anonymous Prolegomena to Platonic Philosophy, AmsterdamGoogle Scholar
White, D. (1993): Rhetoric and Reality in Plato's Phaedrus, AlbanyGoogle Scholar
Whittaker, J. (1969): “Timaeus 27d ff.”, Phoenix 23, 181–5CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whittaker, J. (1973): “Textual comments on Timaeus 27c–d”, Phronesis 27, 387–91Google Scholar
Williams, B. (1959): “Pleasure and Belief”, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 33, 57–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Witt, C. (1992): “Dialectic, Motion, and Perception: De Anima, Book I”, in Nussbaum and Rorty (eds.), 169–183
Wright, L. (1976): Teleological Explanations, LondonGoogle Scholar
Wright, R. (ed.) (2000): Reason and Necessity. Essays on Plato's Timaeus, LondonGoogle Scholar
Wright, R. (2000): “Myth, Science and Reason in the Timaeus”, in Wright (ed.), 1–22
Zaslavsky, R. (1981): Platonic Myth and Platonic Writing, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
Zeyl, D. J. (2000): Plato: Timaeus, IndianapolisGoogle Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×